该捧得时候捧, 该砸得时候砸, 人家有底气维护自己的底线
看看她原生家庭和成长经历, 是不需要为五斗米折腰的人:
Early life and education[edit]
Wilson-Raybould is a descendant of the
Musgamagw Tsawataineuk and
Laich-Kwil-Tach peoples, which are part of the
Kwakwaka’wakw, also known as the Kwak’wala-speaking peoples. She is a member of the
We Wai Kai Nation. Wilson-Raybould carries the Kwak’wala name
Puglaas, which roughly translates to "woman born to noble people".
[7]
Wilson-Raybould is the daughter of
Bill Wilson, a First Nations hereditary chief, politician, and graduate of
University of British Columbia Faculty of Law, and Sandra Wilson, a teacher.
[8] On Canadian national television in 1983, Wilson-Raybould's father informed then-Prime Minister
Pierre Elliott Trudeau that his two daughters hoped to become lawyers and then Prime Minister some day.
[8][9] Born at
Vancouver General Hospital, she was raised in
British Columbia, attending Robert Scott Elementary School in Port Hardy, British Columbia, where her mother also taught, and later
Comox, British Columbia, graduating from
Highland Secondary School.
[10]
Wilson-Raybould studied political science and history at the
University of Victoria where she was awarded her Bachelor of Arts degree.
[11] She then studied for a law degree from the
University of British Columbia Faculty of Law. She married Dr. Tim Raybould (1966-), a First Nations negotiator and consultant and social anthropologist, on November 29, 2008.
[12]